The Real People | |
Background information | |
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Origin | Liverpool, UK |
Genre | Alternative rock, indie rock, Britpop |
Years active | 1988–present |
Labels | CBS |
Current members | Tony Griffiths Chris Griffiths Martin Lappin Tony McGuigan |
Musicians |
The Real People are an English rock band formed in Liverpool in 1988. The band consists of Tony Griffiths (bass guitar, vocals), Chris Griffiths (guitar, vocals), Martin Lappin (guitar) and Tony McGuigan (drums).
The band were a support act for Duran Duran in 2008.
Background information[]
Formed in 1987 by brothers Christopher and Anthony Griffiths, the original line-up consisted of Chris Griffiths (guitar, vocals), Tony Griffiths (bass, vocals), Dave Reilly (drums, ex-China Crisis), Jay Norton (keyboards, ex-It's Immaterial), and Gordon Morgan (guitar, ex-Black). Tony Elson replaced Dave Reilly on drums and was later replaced by Garry Ford. Gordon Morgan was replaced by Sean Simpson, followed by Alan Gillibrand, then by Ian 'Sitar'.
Originally influenced by The Stone Roses and the Inspiral Carpets, as well as by the Mersey sound of the 1960s, the band started playing in local clubs and later toured as support act for the Inspiral Carpets, Ocean Colour Scene, Nelly Furtado, The Pixies, Simple Minds, David Bowie, and others throughout the 1990s and onwards.
In 1989, and managed by Jeffrey Abbotts, they were signed as The Real People by CBS on the Columbia label, although CBS were subsequently bought out by Sony. During this time, under the management of Jeffrey Abbotts, they toured extensively, including a major tour of the USA, Japan, Europe, etc. etc.
They released their self-titled debut album The Real People in 1991. All the songs were written by Chris and Tony Griffiths. This reached the number 59 in the UK Albums Chart.
They recorded a second album, Marshmellow Lane, for CBS, but although "Believer", the first single from the album, charted at No. 38 and another single, "Too Much Too Young", appeared soon afterwards, the album was never actually released.
Their next album, What's on the Outside, was released independently under their own label in 1996. It was critically acclaimed but failed to make the charts. Although another album called Closer was reported to be in preparation in 2002, it was never released.
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